International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2023)

Genotype Prevalence of Lactose Deficiency, Vitamin D Deficiency, and the Vitamin D Receptor in a Chilean Inflammatory Bowel Disease Cohort: Insights from an Observational Study

  • Tamara Pérez-Jeldres,
  • M. Leonor Bustamante,
  • Roberto Segovia-Melero,
  • Nataly Aguilar,
  • Fabien Magne,
  • Gabriel Ascui,
  • Denisse Uribe,
  • Lorena Azócar,
  • Cristián Hernández-Rocha,
  • Ricardo Estela,
  • Verónica Silva,
  • Andrés De La Vega,
  • Elizabeth Arriagada,
  • Mauricio Gonzalez,
  • Gian-Franco Onetto,
  • Sergio Escobar,
  • Pablo Baez,
  • Alejandra Zazueta,
  • Carolina Pavez-Ovalle,
  • Juan Francisco Miquel,
  • Manuel Álvarez-Lobos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms241914866
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 19
p. 14866

Abstract

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Lactose intolerance (LI) and vitamin D deficiency (VDD) have been linked to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We conducted an observational study in 192 Chilean IBD patients to investigate the prevalence of a specific gene variant (LCT-13910 CC genotype) associated with LI and the prevalence of VDD/Vitamin D Receptor (VDR) gene variants. Blood samples were analyzed using Illumina’s Infinium Global Screening Array. The LCT-13910 CC genotype was found in 61% of IBD patients, similar to Chilean Hispanic controls and lower than Chilean Amerindian controls. The frequency of the LCT-13910-C allele in Chilean IBD patients (0.79) was comparable to the general population and higher than Europeans (0.49). Regarding VDR and VDD variants, in our study, the rs12785878-GG variant was associated with an increased risk of IBD (OR = 2.64, CI = 1.61–4.32; p-value = 0.001). Sixty-one percent of the Chilean IBD cohort have a genetic predisposition to lactose malabsorption, and a significant proportion exhibit genetic variants associated with VDD/VDR. Screening for LI and VDD is crucial in this Latin American IBD population.

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